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  1. Telephone numbers in Kosovo. The dialing code for Kosovo is +383. It was assigned by the ITU following an agreement between the authorities of Kosovo and Serbia in an EU-led dialogue. [1] Its dialing code was initially expected to become effective on 1 January 2015, but it was postponed to the finalization of the agreement in late August 2015. [2]

  2. Telephone numbers in San Marino have six to ten digits. Numbers starting with either 0, 8 or 9 are assigned to landlines, 6 is used for mobile services, 5 for IP telephony services and 7 for premium numbers. No trunk prefixes are used: all the digits are always dialed. [1] The country code for San Marino is 378. [2]

  3. All telephone numbers are 9 digits long ( trunk prefix, 0, plus eight numbers). The first one, two, or three digits after the trunk prefix are the area code. The possible formats are: (0x) xxx xx xx, (0xx) xxx xxx, and (0xxx) xx xxx . Originally, there was only one provider of landline telephony, Telekom Slovenije .

  4. An example for calling telephones in Skopje is as follows: 02 xxxxxxx (within Skopje) 02 xxxxxxx (within North Macedonia) +389 2 xxxxxxx (outside North Macedonia) Numbering formats for North Macedonia : +389 2 xxxxxxx geographic numbers – Skopje. +389 3x xxxxxx geographic numbers – eastern area. +389 4x xxxxxx geographic numbers – central ...

  5. Telephone numbers in Liechtenstein. Liechtenstein previously used the Swiss telephone numbering plan (+41) under area code 075. [1] (. This was dialled as +41 75 from outside Switzerland and Liechtenstein). [2] However, on 5 April 1999, it adopted its own international code +423. [3] Consequently, calls from Switzerland now require ...

  6. Overview. The country calling code of Serbia is +381. Serbia and Montenegro received the code of +381 following the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992 (which had +38 as country code). Montenegro switched to +382 after its independence in 2006, so +381 is now used only by Serbia. [2]